Latex Tilda

Latex Tilda




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a b c undefined \widetilde{abc} ab c
a b c undefined \utilde{abc} ab c ​



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You can write a tilde (sometimes called “twiddle”) in a LaTeX document by using \(\sim \) or $\sim$ (sim stands for similar).
As an alternative you can use \texttildelow from thetextcomp package.


If you want to write a letter with a tilde on top of the letter, you can write $\tilde{x}$ .
In this example the tilde will be displayed above the “x”.
If you want more then one letter below the tilde you can use $\widetilde{xyz}$ .


To write a tilde in MonsterWriter simply place the caret into the text where you need to insert the tilde.
Press cmd+i on MacOS or ctrl+i if you run on Windows. Click on the small square root symbol
of the context menu. Now paste \sim or \tilde{x} or \widetilde{xyz} into the text field
for equations.


There is an extra command in LaTeX for the Approximately Equal sign which is represented by a tilded equal sign.
To make use of it write $a \approx b$ to say a is approximately equal b.



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I believe \backslash may be used in math formulae, but not into text itself. Lamport's, Kopka's, and Mittelbach's texts have said as much (but no more), and so left me hanging on how to get a backslash into regular text.
\textbackslash produces a backslash in text-mode. The math-mode $\sim$ and \texttildelow (from textcomp package) are options for a lower tilde (while \~{} and \textasciitilde produce a raised tilde in text-mode)
The Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List is your friend. The correct link seems to keep changing, but if you have a complete TeX Live installation, the command texdoc symbols-a4 will display your local copy.
\textbackslash and \textasciitilde are found in several places in the document, but the LaTeX 2e ASCII Table (Table 529 as of this writing) and the following discussion are a convenient resource for all ASCII characters. In particular, the discussion notes that \~{} and \textasciitilde produce a raised tilde, whilst the math-mode $\sim$ and \texttildelow are options for a lower tilde; the latter is in the textcomp package, and looks best in fonts other than Computer Modern . If you are typesetting file names or urls, the document recommends the url package.
Remember to delimit TeX macros from surrounding text, e.g. bar\textasciitilde{}foo .
There’s now an extensive discussion with a canonical answer on this website. Use the solution described there. tl;dr:
For a URL or file path, use url (or hyperref ). Otherwise:
If you are using the standard Computer Modern font, txfonts or pxfonts : use this workaround:
… or use Latin Modern fonts instead (see next point).
If you are using a PostScript/Type1 font via a package such as mathptmx or lm : Set the font encoding to T1 (via \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} ) and use \textasciitilde .
If you are using a TTF or OTF font via XeTeX or LuaTeX: Use \char`~ to insert a tilde.
textcomp ’s \texttildelow is actually quite a bad choice: it’s too low for most fonts.
A much better rendering can be achieved by the following, which tweaks the appearance of the (otherwise too wide) $\sim$ :
This was taken from the Arbitrary LateX reference … the page also provides a good comparison sheet:
When used in \texttt , I would add a \mathtt around the tilde, to make it fit the font better:
The difference is small but noticeable.
You can also use the "plain TeX" method of indexing the actual ascii character in the current font:
I often use the former for writing macros that need the backslash in the typewriter font; \textbackslash will sometimes still use the roman font depending on the font setup. Of course, if you're using these a lot you should define your own macro for them:
I occurs to me that you might be trying to type URLs. In that case, the url package takes care of everything for you:
For paths (i.e., local files), there is \path , working the same way as \url , just providing the correct links in case hyperref is loaded.
If you are loading hyperref there is no reason to load url as well.
Hmm; \textbackslash (mentioned by others) isn't in my reference book ( Kopka and Daly) .
At any rate, math mode provides \sim , \backslash , and \setminus (the latter two appear to look the same and differ only by spacing in math mode).
My LaTeX book – which, as you would expect, features the \ extensively – seems to use the verbatim environment. For example, this code:
The \verb command is similar, but the argument must be on one line only. The first character after the b is the delimiter; for example:
So you could presumably get your backslash by typing:
You can also add a * – i.e. \verb* or \begin{verbatim*} – to make whitespace visible.
It is interesting to speculate how you would get an example of a verbatim environment into a document..
(using \verb to do the last line, I guess)
For the tilde, you can use empty curly brace pair. That puts the "over the letter" tilde over an "empty" letter, so it's placed upward.
"... tilde symbol ( ~ ), which without
special coding gets interpreted as a
blank space, and therefore needs to be
escaped by a backslash ( \~ ) or
replaced by the math "twiddle" symbol
$\sim$ . Fortunately, there is a
package, url , that provides a
painless way to typeset URL's. To use
this package available, add
near the beginning of the document,
and enclose any web and email
addresses in the document in
\url{...} :
I hope this could help you in typewriting a regular tilde character.
Personally, I learned more actually changing the catcode s myself :)
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There are many uses of tiled symbol . But, the most important thing is to use the tilde symbol over a letter.
In latex, \tilde and \~{} are two important commands for this. And these are the default commands of LaTeX.
But, \~{} command must be used in text mode. For example
Notice if you have knowledge of spanish and Portuguese, this tilde symbol is used over special n, a, and o letters. For example
You look at the output above when you pass a character(n, a, and o) in the \tilde command. Then, convert to italic style is not entirely accurate.
However, \~{} command does not change the style of the font. and this is the best practice in the case of language.
However, there are some characters that are larger than the size of other characters, so it is best practice to use \widetilde commands instead of \tilde and \~{} commands.
Because look at the output above, the size of the tilde symbol is also constant in the case of \tilde and \~{} commands. However, in the case of the \widetilde command, the tilde symbol is responsibly placed over a letter.
In my opinion, the \widetilde command is best for using tilde symbols on all capital letters.
However, you must use the \widetilde command for multiple characters. For example
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